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The 'multipipe' npm package is a utility for creating a pipeline of streams in Node.js. It allows you to easily combine multiple streams into a single pipeline, handling errors and ensuring proper cleanup of resources.
Combining Multiple Streams
This feature allows you to combine multiple streams into a single pipeline. In this example, a file is read, decompressed using gzip, and then extracted using tar-stream. The 'multipipe' function handles the piping and error management.
const multipipe = require('multipipe');
const fs = require('fs');
const zlib = require('zlib');
const tar = require('tar-stream');
const extract = tar.extract();
extract.on('entry', (header, stream, next) => {
stream.on('end', next);
stream.resume();
});
const pipeline = multipipe(
fs.createReadStream('archive.tar.gz'),
zlib.createGunzip(),
extract
);
pipeline.on('error', (err) => {
console.error('Pipeline failed:', err);
});
pipeline.on('finish', () => {
console.log('Pipeline succeeded');
});
Error Handling
This feature demonstrates how 'multipipe' handles errors in the pipeline. If any stream in the pipeline encounters an error, the 'error' event is emitted, and you can handle it appropriately. In this example, an error will occur because the input file does not exist.
const multipipe = require('multipipe');
const fs = require('fs');
const zlib = require('zlib');
const pipeline = multipipe(
fs.createReadStream('nonexistentfile.gz'),
zlib.createGunzip(),
fs.createWriteStream('output.txt')
);
pipeline.on('error', (err) => {
console.error('Pipeline error:', err);
});
'pump' is a similar package that also helps in piping streams together and managing errors. It is simpler and more lightweight compared to 'multipipe', but it does not offer the same level of flexibility in terms of combining multiple streams.
'stream-combiner2' is another package that allows you to combine multiple streams into one. It is similar to 'multipipe' but focuses more on simplicity and ease of use. It also handles errors and ensures proper cleanup of resources.
A better Stream.pipe
that creates duplex streams and lets you handle errors in one place.
var pipe = require('multipipe');
Pass a variable number of streams and each will be piped to the next one.
A stream will be returned that wraps passed in streams in a way that errors will be forwarded and you can write and/or write from it.
Write to the pipe and you'll really write to the first stream, read from the pipe and you'll read from the last stream.
var stream = pipe(a, b, c);
source
.pipe(stream)
.pipe(destination);
In this example the flow of data is:
Each pipe
forwards the errors the streams it wraps emit, so you have one central place to handle errors:
var stream = pipe(a, b, c);
stream.on('error', function(err){
// called three times
});
a.emit('error', new Error);
b.emit('error', new Error);
c.emit('error', new Error);
$ npm install multipipe
MIT
FAQs
pipe streams with centralized error handling
The npm package multipipe receives a total of 1,785,294 weekly downloads. As such, multipipe popularity was classified as popular.
We found that multipipe demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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